Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Michael Keaton Reveals He's Planning On Going By His Real Name Moving Forward

Michael Keaton Douglas
Marilla Sicilia/Archivio Marilla Sicilia/Mondadori Portfolio via Getty Images

The actor revealed to 'People' that his birth name is actually Michael Douglas—but he couldn't use that name when he was first starting out in his career because of, well, the actor Michael Douglas.

Ah, the sacrifices one makes for a career in the arts.

Like many artists, actor Michael Keaton has apparently been working under a stage name for his whole career. His name is actually Michael Douglas, which he could not use as a stage name back in the '70s when he was getting started because there was an actor already using it.


This naming confusion came about because of a rule in the Screen Actor's Guild (SAG), which states that actors cannot repeat the stage name of another existing actor. This rule has led to other such name changes, such as Emma Stone, whose name is Emily.

Michael Keaton announced in a recent interview that he intends to go by Michael Keaton Douglas professionally going forward. He said he chose the name out of a phone book when informed he would have to pick a new stage name.

“I was looking through — I can’t remember if it was a phone book...I must’ve gone, ‘I don’t know, let me think of something here.’ And I went, ‘Oh, that sounds reasonable.’”

Keaton Douglas, whose career began as a trickle in comedic roles, rose to stardom with the one-two combination of titular roles in Batman and Beetlejuice. More recently he's picked up awards for Birdman and a role in the Hulu series Dopesick, about the opioid crisis.

Folks were initially a little confused.


Some commenters were excited about the change.

For diehard fans, the news was not so shocking.


Actors have to change names a lot, it seems, to comply with the SAG rules.


Apparently Michael Douglas—not Michael Keaton Douglas—is a stage name in the first place.


Folks were not impressed with SAG's rules.

Keaton Douglas returned to screens this month as the titular character in the hotly anticipated Beetlejuice Beetlejuice.

More from Entertainment/celebrities

Photo of a grey walled bathroom with the man and woman symbols on the wall.
Photo by Juan Marin on Unsplash

Women Break Down The Things Men Do That They Don't Realize Make Women Feel Safe Or Unsafe

Listen up gents, the ladies are speaking.

It's really easy to be a good guy and not scare women.

Keep ReadingShow less

People Share Bombshells Their Therapist Dropped That Totally Changed Their Perspective

I love therapy.

If only I could afford it regularly.

Keep ReadingShow less
Travis Kelce; Taylor Swift; Greta Gerwig
Late Night with Seth Meyers / YouTube; Perry Knotts/Getty Images; Kate Green/Getty Images for BFI

Taylor Swift: Kelce's Drunken Encounter

He’s Just Travis.

At least that’s how Taylor Swift describes her fiancé—a man who can catch a football midair but apparently can’t tell an Oscar-nominated director from Hugh Grant’s wife after a few tequila shots.

Keep ReadingShow less
George Clooney
LAURENT HOU/Hans Lucas/AFP/Getty Images

George Clooney Explains Why He Decided To Move His 8-Year-Old Twins To France—And It Makes Sense

Most parents will do all that they can to provide the best lives for their children. Celebrities are uniquely able to provide for their kids, thanks to their higher income and access to resources.

George Clooney and his wife, Amal, opened up about their decision to raise their eight-year-old twin daughters, Ella and Alexander, abroad in rural France on a remote farm, far away from the United States and Hollywood.

Keep ReadingShow less
President Trump; Brandi Kruse
C-SPAN

Trump's Ultra-Creepy Interaction With Female MAGA Influencer Has People Recoiling

Conservative influencer Brandi Kruse had a creepy interaction with President Donald Trump during a White House roundtable on Antifa on Wednesday that had critics feeling absolutely repulsed.

Antifa is a loose network of anti-fascist activists with no central structure, no funding, no membership roster, and no offices or leadership hierarchy for prosecutors to target. Despite this, Trump recently signed an executive order declaring it a "domestic terror organization," a move that's been celebrated by his supporters.

Keep ReadingShow less